From July 10 to 11, 2006, the first interministerial Euro-African meeting on the problems of migrations between the two continents was held in Rabat, Morocco. The Conference attracted 57 African and European countries and a couple of humanitarian organizations that insisted on inviting themselves to the negotiation table.

Europe, Asia, America, Australia and even Africa are all familiar with migrations; it is important to manage the phenomenon properly. Repression is probably not the best way, as the Rabat Declaration emphasizes, we need to start a political dialogue but durable solutions in my opinion should involve growth and development on the one hand and an equitable distribution of the results of that growth and development on the other.

France-based African blogger Le Pangolin agreed that policing was a short-sighted solution and had mostly harsh words for the conference, for Europe and for Morocco:

There is a general feeling that the meeting was useless even though some optimistic commentators took it as a sign that Europe is recognizing its failure. Also, Morocco despite its internationally silenced abuses vis-a-vis Negro-Africans last year, cannot continue to play the role of Europe's cop because Morocco itself is a country that offers only emigration to its youth.

Unimaginative European politicians advocate a hardening of the laws against foreigners and the exclusion of a part of the population. That is what transpires from the plan adopted in Rabat, vague measures such as:
*Cooperation between Europe and Africa on the control of borders
*Poverty reduction
*Increase in development aid
*And an unscrupulous Europe hopes to control the financial flows between Europe-based Africans and their homelands
Reading these measures, it is obvious that African and European ministers don't understand this crisis. For the African ministers this was an opportunity to rehash the existing economic relations but alas African ministers have not yet wrapped their heads around the extent of the problem.

What is Behind the Migration of Africans to Europe?

Both bloggers attempted to put migrations of Africans to Europe in perspective.

Migrations have always existed and in various forms: violent or peaceful.
These days, the free circulation of goods and persons is an essential element of a global melting pot and at the heart of what is referred to as “globalization.” Goods and services cannot circulate without people and new information and communication technologies have completed the process of making a global village of the planet, a pipe where the wealth and opulence of some serves as a valve sucking in the less fortunate looking for means of survival. This imposes on humanity as a whole a new attitude made of openness, generosity and tolerance. The notion of closed borders is no longer possible and it makes no sense to want to stop the ocean with one's bare arms.

On the economic front, Africa has a hard time feeding its population, its agricultural output having been channeled towards exports during the colonization period [and since the trend] continued during the years of Independence, Africans’ fate was sealed. (…) A country like the Congo for an annual state budget of 1000 billion of CFA Francs spends about 200 billion CFA Francs to feed its population (this despite the fact that it rains about 9 months out of 12 and that 60% of is surface is covered by forests).
The countries of the North and of Asia continue to subsidize their agriculture and the IMF and the World Bank continue to impose liberalism at the drop of a hat to African countries while preventing those countries from subsidizing their agriculture, making agriculture non-lucrative by pushing peasants to the cities (the rate of urbanization in Africa surpasses that of Europe and USA at up to 65%), with the following consequences:
*Increase in rural poverty
*Increase in city slums
*Increase in sanitary and hygiene problems and hence in infantile diseases and mortality
*Increase in unemployment rates, rural migrants not having for the most part any professional training, they lack everything (schooling, entertainment, health, work) hence the criminalization of private and political life in Africa
*Increase in imports of food from Europe, Asia and the USA ensuing an increase in the purchase of foreign currencies.

One of the factors favoring migrations is the availability of work (even on the black market). Let's not forget that a nation that is getting older needs new blood; that is unfortunately the case of European countries. A renewal of the population is always needed. That is part of dynamics of populations. Another factor is the will to invest less in the training of cadres and to pump the human ressources of other nations: that is the will of the USA and today of France through its new immigration law. What attitude to develop? Reorienting cooperations? Isn't it time that our highly qualified nationals become new kinds of “cadres”?

Support our work

Global Voices stands out as one of the earliest and strongest examples of how media committed to building community and defending human rights can positively influence how people experience events happening beyond their own communities and national borders.

2 comments

A friend of mine is a blogger for the Harvard International Review and recently wrote an article about the conference regarding African immigration into Europe. I think that you might find his outlook on the situation most interesting: http://www.harvardir.org/blog/